'ATTERSON oncerns such as morality, ethics, yuestion that might be worth ask- sist and megalomaniac, could he mt? Then again, that might be the | ead guilty, after all. But what if he | >aded to as a crime? What if he’s : j CHAPTER 5 9 at's the case, why wouldn't Prince 7 public with his dear friend Jeffrey yo ystein and the prince, it’s just ser- 4 q e world? They’re natural winners— i 3 ife were fair, well, how would we a 4 Anna Salter: November 2015 F q hy do powerful men do the things that Jeffrey Epstein a q \ and Prince Andrew have been accused of doing? : Dr. Anna Salter studies child sex offenders profes- j sionally. Educated at Harvard, with a graduate degree in clinical ; psychology, she spoke, with the benefit of hindsight, about Jeffrey | 3 4 Epstein and others like him from her office in Madison, Wisconsin. 4 4 “Consider a car,” says Dr. Salter. “There’s a motor, and there ; yare brakes. We all have sexual impulses we don’t think it would a bea good idea to act on. Most of us have good control over our j behavior. We have good brakes. 4 | “Sexual offenses and inappropriate sexual behavior are some- i times the result of a bad motor—for example, an attraction to 4 Pr epubescent children or eleven-to-fourteen-year-old pubescent 4 children as opposed to postpubescent individuals. But they are 4 ways the result of bad brakes. 226 ; : 227 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022034